England storm back to beat Australia in last-ball thriller

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England storm back to beat Australia in last-ball thriller
England produced an excellent comeback to beat Australia by two works on the final ball of their first T20 international in Southampton on Friday following the visitors looked to be cruising to victory in their first competitive match for six months.

Seemingly in charge while chasing England's 162-7, Australia were pegged back because they lost quick wickets and were left needing 15 off Tom Curran's final over.

Marcus Stoinis missed the first ball, smashed an enormous six off the next, but then missed the 3rd.

He was left needing five off the last ball but could scramble only two from a well-placed yorker as England celebrated an unlikely victory that puts them one-up in the three-match series.

"The bowlers really came good in the last eight overs. It's always difficult coming in, under lights, pressure on, on a slow wicket," said England captain Eoin Morgan.

"Today we went with a batter less, which proved very valuable in the next innings."

England, fresh from their series make an impression on Pakistan, started strongly as opener Jos Buttler hammered 44 off 29 balls.

Dawid Malan then continued his remarkably regular form with a excellent 66, made all the more challenging as nobody could loaf around long to create a partnership in what looked a below-par total.

Australia showed no signs of rustiness within their first game since March as an excellent 98-run opening stand by David Warner (58) and Aaron Finch (46) put them in command.

Steve Smith then hit an instant 18 but after he fell to make it 124-2 Australia slumped to 148-6, losing four wickets for nine runs in 14 balls.

Ashton Agar was go out by an inch on the last ball of the penultimate over, leaving Stoinis to come up just short in the roller-coaster final over.

"We probably struggled to obtain the boundary for the reason that 12 to 18-over mark," said Australia captain Finch.

"We had a number of great hit-outs against each other, but once you play England, it's a little different."

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